New Book: Chris Braithwaite: Mariner, Renegade and Castaway

Chris Braithwaite (aka 'Chris Jones') was a black Barbadian seaman who became a leading organiser of colonial seamen in inter-war Britain. He played a critical role in the Pan-Africanist and wider anti-colonial movement alongside figures such as C.L.R. James and George Padmore. Christian Høgsbjerg recovers Braithwaite's long over-looked life as a black radical and political trade-unionist, and suggests his determined struggle for working class unity in the face of racism and austerity retains relevance for us today.

Endorsements / reviews

'Through his scrupulous research of the compelling life and times of
Chris Braithwaite, Christian Høgsbjerg has uncovered the vital
contribution of a pioneering black activist and anti-colonial stalwart.
Braithwaite's brave achievement should be on the curriculum of all our
schools.'Chris Searle, Race & Class

'Høgsbjerg shines light on a generation of radical fighters against racism and exploitation, caught between the spark of light generated by the 1917 Bolshevik revolution and the crushing darkness of Stalinism.'Hassan Mahamdallie, author of Black British Rebels'Christian Høgsbjerg's "biography from below" of West Indian seaman Chris
Braithwaite opens a portal onto an dynamic Black and Red Atlantic world
of work and politics. Here is an excellent contribution to a "people's
history of the
sea."'Marcus Rediker

'this short new biography of Chris Braithwaite (known as Chris Jones) rescues a forgotten hero of the working class movement from relative obscurity'Resolute Reader

'In opening up the story of 'Chris Jones' or Chris Braithwaite, author Christian
Høgsbjerg has also opened up a largely otherwise forgotten chapter, still with
interesting questions, in the history of the British Left.'Charlie Pottins

'Chris Braithwaite was born in 1885 in Barbados. He became a leading organiser of colonial seamen in inter-war Britain. As a black trade unionist and political activist his life has been marginalised in accounts of this period. Like Mancunian black activist Len Johnson he played an important role in his own community, representing black seamen and other minorities who faced racism,not just from shipowners and fellow seamen but also from their trade union. How he continued to stay active in politics given the forces against him makes this such a wonderful book... well worth buying and only £4!!'Lipstick Socialist

'Chris Braithwaite, who often operated under the name Chris Jones, was a Barbadian trade union activist who chaired the Colonial Seamen’s Association and regularly spoke at rallies and at the Speakers Corner section of London’s Hyde Park. Like CLR James, he contributed political pieces to International African Opinion and other anti-colonial periodicals, and, like James, he was a leftist critic of Stalinism who believed in the power of the organized working class to change society. In contrast to James, of course, the story of Braithwaite’s trans-Atlantic activism has been largely overlooked; Høgsbjerg’s characteristically sturdy study goes a considerable distance toward rectifying this oversight.'Kent Worcester, 'Renegades and Castaways', New Politics 57 (Summer 2014).

2 Comments:

Thanks so much for the great review - much appreciated. Will try and reciprocate in terms of a review of Land and Labour at some point, from first sight it looks a really impressive contribution... cheers.